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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy – Mikaela Shiffrin, the most decorated Alpine skier of all time, is grateful to be at her fourth Winter Olympics. It’s an ‘honor’ and a ‘privilege’ to be part of this event with the red, white and blue on her chest, she said Saturday, Feb. 7 during media availability in Cortina.

But Shiffrin wants to make it clear that she’s representing her own personal values at these Games, not those of President Donald Trump’s administration back home.

Shiffrin came to Cortina prepared to be asked about whether she felt conflicted competing on behalf of the United States given the international backlash to immigration raids championed by the White House. She wrote down, in full, the Nelson Mandela quote actor Charlize Theron read aloud during the Milano Cortina opening ceremony the night before:

‘Peace is not just the absence of conflict. Peace is the creation of an environment where we can all flourish regardless of race, color, creed, religion, gender, class, caste or any other social markers of difference.’

She added, in her own words: ‘For me, as this related to the Olympics, I really hope to show up and represent my own values. Of diversity, and kindness, and sharing. Tenacity, work ethic, showing up with my team every single day.

‘… My greatest hope for this Olympic Games, from a broader perspective, is that it is a beautiful show of cooperation and of competition.’

Team USA athletes here in Italy known they are the face of their home country this month, at a time when political decisions by the Trump administration have earned worldwide criticism.

Shiffrin acknowledged the presence of ‘hardship,’ ‘heartbreak’ and ‘violence’ around the globe, which ‘can be tough to reconcile … when you’re also competing for medals in an Olympic event.’ In the U.S. specifically, ICE raids ordered by the Trump administration have led to the killing of two civilians in Minnesota: Alex Pretti and Renee Good. The Guardian reported Jan. 28 that eight people have been killed by ICE or died while in ICE custody in 2026.

American athletes at Milan’s opening ceremony Friday night received raucous applause from the stadium of 80,000. But when the camera cut to vice president JD Vance, their whoops quickly changed to boos. That message of disapproval came after IOC president Kirsty Coventry urged fans to be ‘respectful’ toward the U.S. contingent.

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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Summer Britcher posted the fastest times for the Team USA during women’s singles luge training runs at the Cortina Sliding Centre on Sunday, Feb. 8.

Britcher’s time of 53.172 seconds on her fifth run was the ninth-best time recorded during the training session, tops among the three American competitors. The women’s luge course at the 2026 Winter Olympics is approximately 1,201 meters (1,313 yards) long.

Germany’s Merle Malou Fraebel and Julia Taubitz posted the top times in Sunday’s two training runs. Taubitz had the fastest time in the six training runs at 52.750, flying down the Cortina Sliding Centre track at a top speed of 119.4 kilometers per hour (approximately 74 mph).

The women’s singles luge medal competition starts Monday, Feb. 9 with two timed runs for each competitor beginning at 11 a.m. ET. There will be two more final timed runs beginning at 11 a.m. ET on Tuesday, Feb. 10. The combined times from all four runs determines the medal winners.

Germany, which won gold and silver in women’s singles luge at the 2022 Olympics, has won the most luge Olympic medals of any country, with 43 overall and 22 gold.

Emily Fischnaller is Team USA’s most decorated women’s luge competitor at the 2026 Winter Olympics. The 32-year-old is the second American to have won multiple luge singles medals, winning bronze at both the 2019 and 2025 World Championships.

Women’s singles luge fastest times for each run

Run 1 — Sandra Robatscher, Italy: 53.553 (Top Team USA finish: Emily Fischnaller, ninth: 53.820)

Run 2 — Elina Bota, Latvia: 53.541 (Top Team USA finish: Ashley Farquharson, eighth: 53.753)

Run 3 — Julia Taubitz, Germany: 53.268 (Top Team USA finish: Emily Fischnaller, 11th: 53.583)

Run 4 — Julia Taubitz, Germany: 53.408 (Top Team USA finish: Emily Fischnaller, fifth: 53.642

Run 5 – Merle Malou Fraebel, Germany: 52.855 (Top Team USA finish: Summer Britcher, seventh: 53.152)

Run 6 — Julia Taubitz, Germany: 52.750 (Top Team USA finish: Summer Britcher, third: 53.172)

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Japan took gold and silver in men’s snowboarding big air thanks to some big tricks from Kira Kimura and Ryoma Kimata. Defending gold medalist Su Yiming of China overtook 17-year-old American Ollie Martin for bronze to keep Team USA from winning its first medal of the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.

But apparently, that all wasn’t enough for NBC broadcaster Todd Richards.

‘That was boring,’ he was caught saying on a hot mic immediately after the event concluded on Peacock. ‘That was so boring. The qualifier was way more exciting.’

Richards is commentating his sixth Winter Olympics. A former professional snowboarder, he competed in halfpipe at the 1998 Nagano Games, where snowboarding made its Olympic debut. He’s also a four-time Winter X Games medalist, winning gold in the halfpipe in 1997, the inaugural year of the Winter X Games.

NBC referred USA TODAY Sports to Richards’ Instagram post on the topic when reached for comment:

Richards stood by his opinion but also expressed his admiration for the competitors.

This story has been updated with new information.

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The 285th and final game of the 2025 NFL season − Super Bowl 60 − has arrived after five months in the making.

In the ever unpredictable league, the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots will meet for the second time in 11 years − this matchup a far bigger surprise than the first given neither of these teams reached the playoffs a year ago. The next question will be whether their second Super Sunday showdown, if not exactly a rematch with Tom Brady and the Legion of Boom having left the stage years ago, can somehow approach the unforgettable Super Bowl 49 classic.

For the final time this season, USA TODAY Sports’ NFL experts submit their predictions − including Super Bowl 60’s MVP:

(Odds provided by BetMGM)

Super Bowl 60 picks, predictions, odds

  • Seahawks vs. Patriots
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SAN FRANCISCO − What probably won’t be a very robust NFL free agent market a month from now is apparently already losing some luster.

According to ESPN, the Dallas Cowboys plan to apply the franchise tag to wideout George Pickens, whose rookie contract is set to expire in March. Acquired in a trade from the Pittsburgh Steelers after last year’s draft, Pickens responded with a career season − his 93 receptions, 1,429 receiving yards and nine touchdown catches all career highs.

The franchise tag for wide receivers in 2025 was roughly $24 million but will doubtless increase by a few million this year.

‘I feel like, if anything, it went up,’ Pickens told the Cowboys’ website earlier this week during the Pro Bowl Games when asked about his price tag for 2026.

‘But me personally, my value is just a playmaker type of guy. I feel like any team or wherever I play, I can be playing in Canada, I just want them to know that I’m definitely a playmaker.’

Pickens, a second-round draft pick by Pittsburgh in 2022, also said he ‘would love to’ remain in Dallas.

‘But when you can’t control it,’ he added, ‘you kind of just hope for the best.’

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has already expressed a desire to retain Pickens.

‘I’m talking to George all the time by virtue of my excitement for him,’ Jones told his team’s website.

‘He’s better than, as far as what he contributed to our team, showing the potential that he could contribute. I’m looking forward to getting things worked out so George can be a Cowboy a long time.’

Dallas wideout CeeDee Lamb has three years left on a four-year, $136 million extension.

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Kirk Cousins’ time in Atlanta appears to have run its course.

Cousins is expected to be released by the Falcons before the NFL’s new league year begins in March, a person close to the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

ESPN was the first to report the news.

Cousins’ contract was amended at the end of the regular season to pave the way for his imminent release from the Falcons, a person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because the of the sensitivity of the matter.

USA TODAY Sports interviewed Cousins this week in San Francisco at Super Bowl 60’s radio row. The quarterback was measured and vague about his playing future with the Falcons.

Cousins began the 2025 season as a backup to Michael Penix Jr. However, the veteran quarterback took over as Atlanta’s starter when Penix suffered a season-ending torn ACL in November. Cousins registered eight starts and played in 10 games. He averaged 172 passing yards per game and threw 10 touchdowns and five interceptions. He went 5-3 in his eight starts.

The Falcons originally signed Cousins to a four-year deal worth up to $180 million in 2024. But Cousins lost his starting job to Penix before the end of the 2024 season.

Cousins’ expected release from Atlanta currently makes Penix the early front-runner to resume the starting role. But the Falcons’ new regime has been noncommittal about Penix being the team’s starting quarterback following an up-and-down campaign.

The biggest question for Falcons president of football Matt Ryan, general manager Ian Cunningham and new coach Kevin Stefanski is who’s going to be Atlanta’s starting quarterback in 2026? The new regime, however, has apparently figured out it won’t be Cousins.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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MILAN — Police fired tear gas and used water canons to disperse demonstrators Saturday, Feb. 7 near a Winter Olympics venue, according to the Associated Press and a travel alert issued by international security company Global Guardian.

The confrontation was brief and occurred at the end of a peaceful march by thousands against the environmental impact of the Games and the presence of U.S. agents in Italy, the AP reported. The incident took place near the Santagiulia Olympic ice hockey rink.

At least five demonstrators were arrested on Marocchetti and Monpiani in Milan as of Friday afternoon, according to Global Guardian’s security alert. The company cited local media as the source of details.

‘Anticipate heightened security and associated disruptions in the affected area over the next several hours,’ the security alert reads. ‘Plot route bypasses. Avoid all protests.’

It was unclear if AP and Guardian Global were citing the same protest, but both reports included similar details and locations.

Reuters reported demonstrators carried placards in protest of the environmental, economic and social impact of the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics carried placards. One placard, according to Reuters, read, ‘I want a state governed by the rule of law, not by force and privileges for the rich, ICE out.’

‘Normally, we do put a notice up to the delegation, just letting them know where the protests are,’ U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee Chief Security Officer Nicole Deal said. ‘So when they’re reading about the city, they’re aware.’

That led to U.S. Figure Skating, USA Hockey and U.S. Speedskating changing the name of their hospitality venue from The Ice House to The Winter House.

‘Our hospitality concept was designed to be a private space free of distractions where athletes, their families, and friends can come together to celebrate the unique experience of the Winter Games,’ the NGBs said in a joint statement provided to USA TODAY Sports, which was the first to report the change. ‘This name captures that vision and connects to the season and the event.’

USA TODAY Sports reporters Jordan Mendoza and Christine Brennan contributed to this report.

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  • Madison Chock and Evan Bates helped Team USA take the lead in the figure skating team event at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
  • The ice dance pair faces a demanding schedule of four programs in six days, more than many of their competitors.
  • Chock and Bates are aiming for an individual ice dance gold medal in addition to a team medal.
  • Despite the challenging schedule, the duo feels mentally and physically prepared for the competition ahead.

MILAN — You wouldn’t have guessed Madison Chock and Evan Bates just put on another season-best performance, no less on the biggest stage at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

The couple were calm and unceremonious with reporters after their free dance in the team event on Saturday, Feb. 7, which put the U.S. in first place with a five-point lead heading into the medal-deciding final day on Sunday.

Were they not happy? Far from it. Were they mad? Doesn’t seem so.

So what was it? Maybe it’s because they have their eyes set on a bigger prize, but are working through a gauntlet to get to it. Simply put, they’re buckling up for arguably the biggest week of their lives.

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Chock and Bates by far have the most challenging schedule of any figure skaters in the Games: Four programs in six days, including back-to-back duty in the team event on Feb. 6 and 7. Now, they have 48 hours until the ice dance competition opens Feb. 9 with the rhythm dance and concludes on Feb. 11 with the free dance. Their performances in the team event set up Team USA for its second straight gold medal.

“Our team is incredibly strong, arguably as strong as it’s ever been, and I have the utmost faith in them,” Chock said. “I’ll be proud of them no matter what the outcome is.”

But the most decorated ice dance pair in U.S. figure skating history wants more than a team medal in Milan — they want the ice dance gold medal, the one achievement they’ve been chasing for years. But while they did so much heavy lifting for their team, their competition got extra rest.

Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron (France) and Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson (Great Britain) didn’t skate the free dance because France and Great Britain didn’t qualify for the final. Canada did made the final, but it opted to go with Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha for the free dance, saving the legs of Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier. They’ll all be well-rested for the ice dance while Chock and Bates will still be recovering.

On paper, it seems like Chock and Bates are at a disadvantage. However, if you’ve seen this duo at all this season, you know that’s far from the case.

“We came into the event knowing that that was a possibility,” Chock said. “We’re mentally and physically prepared.”

For as crowded and deep the ice dance field is, the Americans don’t see it as a competition with others. Bates said they are just competing with themselves.

And every single time, they keep on winning.

“It’s just a progression,” he said. “It’s very cliche, but it is our mindset, and it is our approach, and it’s how we have stayed focused, and it’s how we’ve been training.”

A whirlwind of a week halfway done, but the job is far from over. It’s the biggest challenge of their careers, and this pair is ready for it.

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Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard denied any wrongdoing on Saturday as Democrats question why a whistleblower complaint filed against her last May took nearly a year before it was referred to Congress.

‘[Virginia Democrat] Senator Mark Warner and his friends in the Propaganda Media have repeatedly lied to the American people that I or the ODNI ‘hid’ a whistleblower complaint in a safe for eight months,’ Gabbard wrote in a lengthy X post on Saturday. ‘This is a blatant lie.’

She continued, ‘I am not now, nor have I ever been, in possession or control of the Whistleblower’s complaint, so I obviously could not have ‘hidden’ it in a safe. Biden-era IC Inspector General Tamara Johnson was in possession of and responsible for securing the complaint for months.’

The highly classified complaint by a U.S. intelligence official alleging wrongdoing on the part of Gabbard was filed eight months ago with the intelligence community’s watchdog office and was first reported on by the Wall Street Journal.

The complaint has been locked in a safe since its filing, according to the Journal, with one U.S. official telling the newspaper that the disclosure of its contents could cause ‘grave damage to national security.’

The whistleblower’s lawyer has accused Gabbard’s office of slow-walking the complaint, which her office has denied, calling it ‘baseless and politically motivated.’ 

Meanwhile, Democrats are also questioning why it took her office so long to hand the complaint over to Congress.

‘The law is clear,’ Warner, the senior Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Thursday, according to NPR, adding that the complaint was required to be sent to Congress within 21 days of its filing. ‘I think it was an effort to try to bury this whistleblower complaint.’

Neither the contents of the complaint nor the allegations against Gabbard have been revealed.

Gabbard wrote on Saturday that the first time she saw the complaint was ‘when I had to review it to provide guidance on how it should be securely shared with Congress.’

‘As Vice Chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senator Warner knows very well that whistleblower complaints that contain highly classified and compartmented intelligence—even if they contain baseless allegations like this one—must be secured in a safe, which the Biden-era Inspector General Tamara Johnson did and her successor, Inspector General Chris Fox, continued to do,’ she continued. ‘After IC Inspector General Fox hand-delivered the complaint to the Gang of 8, the complaint was returned to a safe where it remains, consistent with any information of such sensitivity.’

She claimed that either ‘Warner knows these facts and is intentionally lying to the American people, or he doesn’t have a clue how these things work and is therefore not qualified to be in the U.S. Senate.’

Gabbard further wrote that ‘When a complaint is not found to be credible, there is no timeline under the law for the provision of security guidance. The ‘21 day’ requirement that Senator Warner alleges I did not comply with, only applies when a complaint is determined by the Inspector General to be both urgent AND apparently credible. That was NOT the case here.’

An inspector general representative said that it had determined some of the allegations in the complaint against Gabbard weren’t credible, while it hasn’t made a determination on others, according to the Journal.

Gabbard said she was made aware that she needed to provide security guidance on the complaint by IC Inspector General Chris Fox on Dec. 4, ‘which he detailed in his letter to Congress.’

Afterward, she said she ‘took immediate action to provide the security guidance to the Intelligence Community Inspector General, who then shared the complaint and referenced intelligence with relevant members of Congress last week.’

In closing her post, Gabbard once again accused Warner of spreading ‘lies and baseless accusations over the months for political gain,’ which she said ‘undermines our national security and is a disservice to the American people and the Intelligence Community.’

Warner’s office told Fox News Digital Gabbard’s post was an ‘inaccurate attack that’s entirely on brand for someone who has already and repeatedly proven she’s unqualified to serve as DNI.’ 

Republicans on the House and Senate intelligence committees have backed up Gabbard, with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., writing on X on Thursday: ‘I have reviewed this ‘whistleblower’ complaint and the inspector general handling of it. I agree with both inspectors general who have evaluated the matter: the complaint is not credible and the inspectors general and the DNI took the necessary steps to ensure the material has handled and transmitted appropriately in accordance with law.’

He addded, ‘To be frank, it seems like just another effort by the president’s critics in and out of government to undermine policies that they don’t like; it’s definitely not credible allegations of waste, fraud, or abuse.’

Gabbard’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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  • American snowboarder Ollie Martin, 17, finished fourth in the men’s big air final at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.
  • Martin was pushed off the podium by China’s Su Yiming on the final jump, a move that created some controversy.
  • He competed with a broken arm sustained just two weeks prior to the Games.

LIVIGNO, Italy – The first competitive controversy of the 2026 Winter Olympics manifested in Team USA missing out on the chance to earn its first medal on the first official day of the Games.

Richards, though, was not wrong. The qualifiers two nights ago here at Livigno Snow Park were more enthralling. An event that gives boarders three chances to do their biggest trick turned into a toned-down display.

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But it gave Martin a real shot at the podium, a position he held until China’s Su Yiming – the reigning gold-medalist in the event – did another switch backside 1900 melon. Yiming caught himself on the ground with both hands, but that didn’t matter to the judges. They rewarded him for going big with a score that allowed him to leapfrog Martin, pushing him off the podium and giving the bronze to Yiming.

“We’re not trying to compete just on difficulty level or who is the best,” Yiming said. “ … It’s about being able to have the best tactics and strategy, other than just challenging yourself to the highest difficulty. Consistency is the most important. I have really prepared many high-difficulty tricks in competition. And I did finish them in my previous training. It’s a pity that I could not present it today.”

Martin declined to speak to reporters, with U.S. Ski and Snowboard saying he was disappointed in the result. A trio of U.S.-based reporters managed to wrangle his mother Anne.

Anne didn’t want to say anything about Yiming’s final jump and subsequent score.

Instead, she passed on an opportunity to acknowledge a fantastic finish to his Olympic debut, as he was the lone American of the four slopestyle/big air members to advance to finals. He qualified ninth and was in 10th going into his last run, when a frontside double 1800 mute propelled him into second.

“I was surprised he was still there for so long,” Anne said.

She added: “I have an incredible amount of faith in Ollie. He knows what he’s doing. He’s very smart about it.”

Anne said it was harder for Martin to make the Olympics and that competing here is more of a celebration. She knew that the frontside double 1800 was in the bag, because he grabs with his left arm – and he broke his right arm two weeks ago while training for the X Games in Aspen, Colorado. He underwent surgery the next day and eventually made his way over to Italy.

“I think he’s doing great,” she said.

Martin is certainly a shy kid who possesses negative interest in the spotlight at this point in his career, it seems.

“He’s just quiet,” Anne said.

But it definitely would have been nice to hear from the kid about that.

“If he was going to do his pullback (1600 – 4.5 revolutions), that would have been crazy and dangerous,” Anne said.

Japan’s Kira Kimura and Ryoma Kimata finished with gold and silver, respectively. Martin will compete next in the men’s slopestyle competition. Qualifying begins Monday, Feb. 16.

Martin owns a snowboarding figure that he brings with him on trips and puts it through flips and tricks to help with his own visualization on jumps and rails. It made the trip to the Alps with him.

“My mom made me bring it,” Martin told reporters during a pre-Games news conference. “Honestly, that toy was really helpful for me. I could use it to visualize. I was able to come up with some tricks with that toy.”

A relative newcomer, Martin placed second in big air at the Youth Winter Games in Gangwon, South Korea, in 2024. Last year, he finished third in both big air and slopestyle at the world championships in Switzerland. His best finish this season came at a World Cup in Steamboat Springs, Colorado (third in big air).

Then came qualifying for the Olympics, then finals – and nearly a podium.

“It’s all going to plan so far,” he said. “It’s really great.”

Imagine how a medal would have fit into said plan.

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